Woodrow Wilson’s idealistic thought was embodied in his Fourteen Points Speech, and in the creation of the League of Nations.
•Idealism may find itself in opposition to Realism, a worldview which argues that a nation’s national interest is more important than ethical or moral considerations
•Idealism was a relatively short-lived school of thought.
•Liberalism manifested a tempered version of Wilson’s idealism in the wake of World War I.
Idealism (Liberalism)
•liberal thinkers devised a set of international institutions based on rule of law and regularized interaction.
•International organizations, such as the UN, the NATO, the Bretton Woods system, and General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), were calculated both to maintain a balance of power as well as regularize cooperation between nations.
•Neoconservatism drew from Liberalism its intense focus on the promotion of “universal values,” in this case democracy, human rights, free trade, women's rights and minority protections.
Woodrow Wilson’s idealistic thought was embodied in his Fourteen Points Speech, and in the creation of the League of Nations.•Idealism may find itself in opposition to Realism, a worldview which argues that a nation’s national interest is more important than ethical or moral considerations•Idealism was a relatively short-lived school of thought.•Liberalism manifested a tempered version of Wilson’s idealism in the wake of World War I. Idealism (Liberalism)•liberal thinkers devised a set of international institutions based on rule of law and regularized interaction.•International organizations, such as the UN, the NATO, the Bretton Woods system, and General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), were calculated both to maintain a balance of power as well as regularize cooperation between nations.•Neoconservatism drew from Liberalism its intense focus on the promotion of “universal values,” in this case democracy, human rights, free trade, women's rights and minority protections.
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